In 2005 my wife wanted a small laptop. We settled on a 12" LCD Averatec, a Korean job. Not a robust model, what it lacked in build quality, it made up for in price at ~$800 after rebates.
Well, it died last week and we needed to replace it, and fast (I usually like to take my time, but my wife was in a hurry).
I had repaired it and got 'er goin' twice before, but no such luck this time.
The options settled out into three contenders:
* Acer 2008 version of the Averatec: consumer-grade 12" LCD & current hardware, but Win Vista for ~$850.
* IBM business-grade Thinkpad T41 14" LCD refurb/off-lease, a machine that is ~3 years old, WinXP Pro, for sub-$500.
* A highly-regarded consumer-grade Toshiba 12" LCD running Win Vista for ~$850.
I spoke with some of the sales folks and they warned against blowing away Vista and going over with XP, because the manufacturers of consumer laptops can be kinda worthless when it comes to driver support even on OSes their machines deliver with, let alone one step "back" to XP.
Considering it was my own money, I was not willing to gamble I would brick my wife's new $800+ laptop.
I am very glad we went with the IBM iron. I was able to reformat the HD and joy of joys, IBM/Lenovo had oodles of quality drivers, even a recent BIOS update. Only one driver, the embedded doohicky, was hinky. Also, many of the drivers were pretty recent updates & the READMEs told of multiple updates over time. Averatec had only ever provided the original drivers, no updates to be seen.
Sucker feels stout, but weighs almost as like as the 12" Averatec. Just a quality machine. Also, it has a fairly decent ATI video card, so it is a beter graphics performer than the Averatec.
I have always had a soft spot for heavy iron or other quality hardware past its prime. I think my wife can expect a shiny, refurbished IBM/Lenovo in three years...and I'll inherit the T41 and run Xubuntu or some other linux with a light(er) footprint.